Cardwell v. Sprigg's Heirs

37 Ky. 36, 7 Dana 36, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 18, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 37 Ky. 36 (Cardwell v. Sprigg's Heirs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cardwell v. Sprigg's Heirs, 37 Ky. 36, 7 Dana 36, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 97 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an action of ejectment, on sundry distinct de-m¡ses — one of which is in the name of the heirs of Abraham Owen, who was the senior patentee of the land sued for, and another is in the name of William Card-well, to whom those heirs conveyed their title, on the 5th of April, 1832.

A tenant, who had occupied the land since 1806, under Owens, having abandoned the possession of it, the defendants, the heirs of Osborne Sprigg, who claimed dt under a junior grant, leased it, in July, 1831, and whilst it was unoccupied, to one Shipman, who owned and then' resided on an adjoining tract, and who agreed to take possession of it, and hold it for the lessors, for a term of about three years; but who did not manifest any actual occupancy or use of it until “early in April, “ 1832, when he hauled (rails) around part of the land, and laid some of the worm of the fence.”

Verdict and judgment for defendant, and appeal. A conveyance, lancUs h^the am tual adverse occu ger to^he^on-l™ot, passes no the6’ champerty act of !24; unless the conveyance is made to con-when the con-^ot illegal*6 W£*S Though a sale of land that is held adversely by one who is no party to the contract, is void, by the champerty act of ’24, and the conveyance passes no title, still there can be no recovery of the land upon the title of the vendor, where it appears (to the satisfaction of the jury) that the action is for the benefit of the champertous purchaser. But if it appears (to the satisfaction of the jury) that the cham-pertous sale has been abandoned, and the action was instituted actually for the benefit of the vendor, he may recover; and, even where the purchaser has recovered the land and acquired the possession, his vendor may still treat the champertous sale as a nullity, and recover the land from his own vendee.

, Upon these facts, the Circuit Court instructed the jury in substance: — First, that, if they believed that Shipman was in the' adverse actual possession of the land at the date of the deed from the heirs of Owen to Cardwell, that conveyance was, in judgment of law, champertous and void. Secondly, that, if they believed that this suit was prosecuted for Cardwell’s benefit, there should be a verdict for the defendants on the demise in the name of Owen’s heirs. And also, thirdly, that, as Ship-man owned and was residing on an adjoining tract of land, the law implied or presumed that he was, in like manner, in the actual possession of the land leased to him.

And the jury having found a verdict for the defendants, upon which judgment was rendered in their favor, we are now to decide whether the Circuit Judge erred in giving those instructions, or either of them; for if, in either of them, there be error, the judgment must be reversed.

First. Upon the hypothesis stated by the Judge, his first instruction is unexceptionable; for, as the first-section of the champerty statute of 1824 expressly de-dares, that every sale of land in the adverse occupancy of a stranger to the contract shall be void, the convey-anee from Owen’s heirs to Cardwell passed no title, if, as assumed, the tenant of Sprigg’s heirs was, at the date , - . , 1 . ' . tnereol, m the actual possession ot the land • under Sprigg’s adverse title — unless t'he cohveya’nce was only the consummatiofi of a previous bona fide sale to Cai’d-well, at a time when such a sale was not illegal; and there having been some testimony tending, in some degree at least, to prove that Shipman was, in fact, possessed adversely of the land at the date of the deed to Cardwell, and it not appearing that the conveyance was made in execution of a valid executory sale, the instruction was not abstract, and was therefore unexceptionable.

Second. Though the pre-existent title of Owen’s heirs , [38]*38was neither divested nor affected by a void contract purporting to transfer it, yet, in our judgment, the policy of the first section of the statute of 1824 would be frus-

trated, and the chief object of enacting it would be evaded, if Cardwell, notwithstánding a void purchase, may, in their names, and on their still-subsisting title, evict the occupant by a suit which he is permitted thus to prosecute only because he made the prohibited contract. It is true that, after such eviction, Cardwell would not, as between himself and his vendors, be, in a legal point of view, in a better condition than he was before; for, his contract with them being void, they might still, nevertheless, elect to hold their title, and enjoy the full and exclusive benefit of it. But the aim of the statute of 1824 was to protect bom fide occupants of land against vexatious litigation growing out of champertous contracts, which tend to generate suits that otherwise, in many cases, woulchnever have occurred. So far as the parties to such contracts may be alone concerned, it is not a matter of public concern whether their contracts be valid or invalid, legal or illegal. Neither their interest nor their rights were considered by the Legislature; the peace of society and the repose of occupants were alone consulted by the act of 1824; and these would be as liable to be jeoparded, and would be as often disturbed, since the enactment of that statute as before, if the only constructive effect of it should be to change merely the ordinary style of suits, by substituting the name of the champertous vendor for that of his vendee. It may, however, be supposed by some, that the Legislature considered the legal nullity of contracts made in violation of the first section of the statute, and the risk resulting therefrom to the purchaser, a sufficient penalty for preventing such contracts, and that, therefore, no other sanction or mode for effectuating the contemplated end of the enactment being deemed necessary or proper, the courts should not prescribe any other than that expressly declared by the letter of the law: that is, that, the contract being void, the purchaser should have no legal right, either to enforce his contract against his vendor, or to enjoy the benefit of it without his gratuitous consent.

[39]*39But, in our opinion, sucha restricted interpretation is unauthorized, and would convict the law, not only of imbecility and inconsistency, but of suicide; for it'was altogether useless and illusory to allow a defendant, as the third section does, to plead the matter of the first section in bar of an action in the name of the champer-tous purchaser, unless he be allowed, also, to avail himself of the same matter by ar plea in bar to a suit brought, for the same purpose, by the purchaser, in the name of his vendor; and it is evident that, if the same plea be not available in each form of suit, so much of the third section of the statute as was intended for sub-serving the objects of the first section, may be easily evaded, and altogether defeated.

It cannot be material to an occupant of land, whether a, suit for evicting him, be brought in the name of a vendor, or that of a vendee upon the title of the former,at the instance and for the benefit of the latter. The only matter of concern to the occupant or to the public, . is whether the suit was the offspring of a champertous contract. Therefore, this Court said arguendo in the case of Redman vs. Sanders, (2 Dana,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lanham v. Huff
14 S.W.2d 402 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1929)
Pioneer Coal Company v. Asher, Sr.
276 S.W. 487 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1925)
Colson's Administrator v. Johnson
271 S.W. 1033 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1925)
Doyle v. Cornett
219 S.W. 1059 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)
Hellard v. Hubbard
169 S.W. 727 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1914)
Altemus v. Nickell
74 S.W. 221 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1903)
Crowley v. Vaughan
74 Ky. 517 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1875)
Harman v. Brewster
70 Ky. 355 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1870)
Graves v. Leathers
56 Ky. 665 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1856)
Baley v. Deakins
44 Ky. 159 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1844)
Cardwell v. Sprigg's heirs
40 Ky. 369 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1840)
Beaty v. Hudson
39 Ky. 322 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1840)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Ky. 36, 7 Dana 36, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cardwell-v-spriggs-heirs-kyctapp-1838.